Do we really think today when we sit down to eat...GAP??/ What is GAP???
G
Game-Changer! Recognize that this moment could change everything. You have
the opportunity to choose your next move right NOW!
A Ask yourself: Am I satisfied? Am I no longer hungry? Why am I eating?
P Power! You have the power to make a choice. Continue to eat or stop right here. If you are hungry, that is find, eat! If not, investigate what feeling or situation is prompting you to eat.
A Ask yourself: Am I satisfied? Am I no longer hungry? Why am I eating?
P Power! You have the power to make a choice. Continue to eat or stop right here. If you are hungry, that is find, eat! If not, investigate what feeling or situation is prompting you to eat.
There is a brief “gap” between each bite, where you
can insert a moment of mindfulness. In that moment, you have the power to make
a conscious decision.
Eating as mindfully as we do on retreat or in a
mindfulness course is not realistic for many of us, especially with families,
jobs, and the myriad distractions around us. This is not to mention that our
friends, family and colleagues might not have the patience to eat with us as we
take five minutes with each bite. So have some self-compassion, and consider formal
mindful eating on retreat and special occasions, as well as informal mindful
eating in your daily life.
Mindful Eating is allowing yourself to become aware
of the positive and nurturing opportunities that are available through food
selection and preparation by respecting your own inner wisdom. By using all
your senses in choosing to eat food that is both satisfying to you and
nourishing to your body, acknowledging your responses to food (likes, dislikes
or neutral) without judgment, and becoming aware of physical hunger and satiety
cues to guide your decisions to begin and end eating you can change your
relationship to food. Here are six simple guidelines to keep in mind to discern
between mindless and (more) mindful eating, and bring our bodies and minds back
together.
1) Let your
body catch up to your brain
Eating
rapidly past full and ignoring your body’s signals vs. slowing down and eating
and stopping when your body says it’s full.
Slowing
down is one of the best ways we can get our mind and body to communicate what
we really need for nutrition. The body actually sends its satiation signal
about 20 minutes after the brain, which is why we often unconsciously overeat.
But, if we slow down, you can give your body a chance to catch up to your brain
and hear the signals to eat the right amount. Simple ways to slow down might
just include many of your grandmother’s
manners, like sitting down to eat, chewing each bite 25 times (or more),
setting your fork down between bites, and all those old manners that are maybe
not as pointless as they seemed.
2) Know your
body’s personal hunger signals
Are
you responding to an emotional quotient or responding to your body’s needs?
Often
we listen first to our minds, but like many mindfulness practices, we might
discover more wisdom by tuning into our bodies first. Rather than just eating
when we get emotional signals, which may be different for each of us, be they
stress, sadness, frustration, loneliness or even just boredom, we can listen to
our bodies. Is your stomach growling, energy low, or feeling a little
lightheaded? Too often, we eat when our mind tells us to, rather than our
bodies. True mindful eating is actually listening deeply to our body’s signals
for hunger. Ask yourself: What are your body’s hunger
signals, and what are your emotional hunger triggers?
3) Develop
healthy eating environments
Eating
alone and randomly vs. Eating with others at set times and places
Another way that we eat mindlessly is
by wandering around looking through cabinets, eating at random times and
places, rather than just thinking proactively about our meals and snacks. This
slows us down for one thing, but prevents us from developing healthy
environmental cues about what and how much to eat, and wires our brains for new
cues for eating that not always ideal. (Do you really want to create a habit to
eat every time you get in the car, or other situations?) Sure, we all snack
from time to time, but it can boost both your mind and body’s health, not to
mention greatly helping your mood and sleep schedule to eat at consistent times
and places. Yes, that means sitting down (at a table!), putting food on a plate
or bowl, not eating it out of the container, and using utensils not our hands.
It also helps to eat with others, not only are you sharing and getting some
healthy connection, but you also slow down and can enjoy the food and conversation
more and we take our cues from our dinner partner, not over or under eating out
of emotion.
When we put our food away in cabinets
and the fridge, we also are more likely to eat healthy amounts of healthy food,
so consider what’s around, where it is and whether it’s in sight. If we limit
eating to kitchen and dining room, we are also less likely to eat mindlessly or
eat while multitasking. When food is around, we eat it. And food, not always
the healthiest, is often around at the holidays.
You
don’t have to plan your food down to each bite, and it’s important to be
flexible especially at special occasions, but just be aware of the fact that you might be changing
your eating habits at different times of year or for different occasions. And
when you do plan ahead, you are also more likely to eat the amount your body
needs in that moment than under eating and indulging later, or overeating and
regretting it later.
Classic advice is to also not shop
when hungry, but the middle path applies here as well. A psychological effect known
as “moral licensing” has shown that shoppers who buy kale are more likely to
then head to the alcohol or ice cream section than those who don’t. We
seem to think that our karma will balance out and we can “spend” it on junk
food, or other less than ideal behaviours.
4) Eat food not
stories
Eating
foods that are emotionally comforting vs. eating foods that are nutritionally
healthy
This is another tricky balance, and
ideally we can find nourishing foods that are also satisfying and comforting. As
we practice eating healthier and a greater variety foods, we are less inclined
to binge on our comfort foods, and more inclined to enjoy healthy foods,
ultimately finding many foods mentally and physically satisfying as opposed to
just a few.
5) Consider the
life cycle of your food
Considering
where food comes from vs. thinking of food as an end product.
Unless you are a hunter-gatherer or
sustenance farmer, we have all become ever more disconnected from our food in
recent years. Many of us don’t even consider where a meal comes from beyond the
supermarket packaging. This is a loss, because eating offers an incredible
opportunity to connect us more deeply to the natural world, the elements and to
each other.
When we pause to consider all of the
people involved in the meal that has arrived on your plate, from the loved ones
(and yourself) who prepared it, to those who stocked the shelves, to those who
planted and harvested the raw ingredients, to those who supported them, it is
hard to not feel both grateful and interconnected. Be mindful of the water,
soil, and other elements that were part of its creation as you sit down to eat
whatever you are eating. You can reflect on the cultural traditions that brought
you this food, the recipes generously shared from friends, or brought from a
distant place and time to be a handed down in the family.
As you consider everything that went
into the meal, it becomes effortless to experience and express gratitude to all
of the people who gave their time and effort, the elements of the universe that
contributed their share, our friends or ancestors who shared recipes and even
the beings who may have given their lives to a part of creating this meal. With
just a little more mindfulness like this, we may begin to make wiser choices
about sustainability and health in our food, not just for us but for the whole
planet.
6) Attend to
your plate
Distracted
eating vs. just eating
We’ve all had the experience of going
to the movies with our bag full of popcorn, and before the coming attractions
are over, we are asking who ate all of our popcorn. When we are distracted, it
becomes harder to listen to our body’s signals about food and other needs. With
your next meal, try single-tasking and just eating, with no screens or
distractions besides enjoying the company you are sharing a meal and
conversation with.
Someone Who Eats Mindfully:
·
Acknowledges that
there is no right or wrong way to eat but varying degrees of awareness
surrounding the experience of food.
·
Accepts that their
eating experiences are unique.
·
Is an individual
who by choice directs their attention to eating on a moment-by-moment basis.
·
Gains awareness of
how they can make choices that support health and wellbeing.
·
Becomes aware of
the interconnection of earth, living beings, and cultural practices and the
impact of their food choices on those systems.
So while formal mindful eating
practices may be what we think of when we look back on a mindfulness course or
retreat we attended, the reality is that we do live, and eat, in the real world
which is a busy place. But we can take the insights gained from our formal
practice- slowing down, listening to our bodies, doing one thing at a time,
making even small rituals, and considering all that went into our meal on a
more regular basis and bring more informal mindfulness to our daily meals.